Daimler Trucks had some great news for us this week - they
managed to get license from Nevada state of US for their self-driving
Freightliner Inspiration Concept Truck, making it the world's first road-legal autonomous
truck operating on the American highways. The 36-tonne truck opens up new
future on automation levels in the commercial vehicles. With NHTSA’s Level 3
'Limited Self-Driving', this big rig is just one level away from pinnacle of
automation, but then we also have to realise that it ain't any easy a deal to
reach complete automation with present technologies and road standards any time
soon.
Remember that 1986 horror movie Maxmium Overdrive in which
machines apocalyptically come to life and take on their creators, the humans?
It appears like the Freightliner Inspiration truck is something of that sort.
The beefy, hooded truck with attractive LEDs and swooping design is essentially
an evolution of the Freightliner Cascadia, but it is the Highway Pilot
Technology that makes the difference. With a host of self-driving
paraphernalia, this auto-pilot system drives the truck on the highway without driver's
inputs.
But before you get freaked/ excited, let me tell you these
are just bunch of test vehicles, and not
commercial trucks ready for production. There has to be a driver on the seat
and ought to be ready to take over if the truck encounters a tricky situation
it can’t handle. This is a highway-only system as of now and cannot manage
real-life city traffic situations.
Freightliner Inspiration Concept Truck |
Let me elaborate on the technological aspects. The truck, in actuality, uses larger versions of the lane departure warning, adaptive cruise control, and blind spot detection techs that are already employed in passenger cars. Daimler's self-piloting system, also previewed in the Mercedes-BenzFuture Truck 2025 at IAA last year, uses a wide-angle radar and twin cameras up front, with adaptive cruise control that is standard on Freightliner trucks.
Once the driver reaches highway, he can ask the system to
take over driving by pressing a button. It sets top speed to comply with speed
limits, by picking up clues from road signs apparently using the camera and an
advanced OCR software. The cruise control keeps pace with road traffic ahead,
with lane consciousness and emergency braking. Driver can override the
steering, brakes, or accelerate the truck at any time he wants. When it’s time
to move out of highway, the driver has to take over. That's similar to some of
the other self-driving cars that are on tests now. In extreme weather
conditions, the system asks the driver to take over by giving him enough time
to regain attention.
Critical infos of the truck comes handy on a tablet |
Truck systems like this can could evolve to an almost
driverless caravan series, a future possibility in well-developed highway
systems of the Western world. This idea envisages a lead truck, with drivers in
the cab, to lead a caravan of a dozen, or even 100, trucks along the route. The
trucks will remain connected electronically, and maintain enough of a gap and
speeds between them.
US's National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the
premier agency regulating automated vehicles, defines vehicle automation as
having five levels:
Level 0: No-Automation - The driver is in complete and sole
control of the primary vehicle controls at all times.
Level 1: Function-specific Automation - involves specific
control functions like ESP or pre-charged brakes, where the vehicle
automatically assists with braking to enable the driver to regain control than
acting alone.
Level 2: Combined Function Automation - involves automation
of at least two primary control functions like adaptive cruise control with
lane centering.
Level 3: Limited Self-Driving Automation - Vehicles at this
level enable the driver to cede full control of all safety-critical functions
under certain traffic or environmental conditions and in those conditions to
rely heavily on the vehicle to monitor for changes in those conditions
requiring transition back to driver control. The driver is expected to be
available for occasional control, but with sufficiently comfortable transition
time. The Freightliner Inspiration truck falls under this category, along with
Google's self-driving car.
Level 4: Full Self-Driving Automation - complete automation
with all safety-critical driving functions and roadway conditions monitoring
for an entire trip. Driver will provide destination or navigation input, but is
not expected to be available for control at any time during the trip. This
includes both occupied and unoccupied vehicles.
The most advanced and expensive passenger cars today
globally get Level 2 automation. Level 3 is the progress these concepts have
made so far. But then, there is a huge gap between Level 3 and Level 4,
pointing to the real fact that we still have to go a long way in complete
automation technologies. It's isn't that simple to make a car drive on its own
independently, and there are lot more issues involved to the idea other thantechnology.
Also Read: Self-Driving Cars: Better Than You, But What's The Hold-up??
Photo Credits: Indianautosblog.com
Also Read: Self-Driving Cars: Better Than You, But What's The Hold-up??
Photo Credits: Indianautosblog.com
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